Claude Morley

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Claude Morley (22 June 1874 – 13 November 1951) was an English antiquary and entomologist who specialised in Hymenoptera and Diptera. He has been described by Peter Marren as "Suffolk's best-known entomologist".

Biography

Morley was born at Astley Bank in Blackheath in 1874 and educated at Beccles before attending King's School, Peterborough and later Epsom College. After living on the Isle of Wight in his father's house at Cowes, he moved in 1892 to Ipswich where he worked with John Ellor Taylor, then Curator of the Ipswich Museum. He married in 1904, living at Monk Soham until his death in 1951. He had no radio, telephone, or electricity in his house. E.A. Elliott was a close friend, as was Arthur Chitty. Morley worked first on Coleoptera, then Hemiptera and then Ichneumonidae. His magnum opus was the five volume Ichneumons of Great Britain (1903–1914). Morley's collection of mainly Suffolk material covering the period 1898–1951 is in Ipswich Museum. It occupies around 260 drawers. There are Cerambycids bearing his name in the Kauffmann collection at Manchester. Morley was a Fellow of the Entomological Society of London 1896. In 1929 he was one of the founding members of the Suffolk Naturalists' Society, and an editor of Transactions of the Suffolk Naturalists' Trust, the society's journal. Among pre-1950 British entomologists, Morley showed a relative interest in Irish fauna. He also wrote poetry under the pseudonym of Maude Clorley.

Works

Hemiptera

Hymenoptera

Coleoptera

Morley also wrote many articles in the Entomologist's monthly magazine, Entomologist's Record and Journal of Variation, and other periodicals, and he was on the editorial staff of The Entomologist from 1909.

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